The singer returns to the found-footage motif with a mix of strippers, instructional drug videos and digitally aged clips.

Lana Del Rey is back with another visually arresting music video, this one for her new single "Carmen," about a 17-year-old party girl. ("Lying to herself 'cause her liquor's top shelf," the singer coos in one verse.)

Released over the weekend, the video builds on a style introduced with her breakout hit, "Video Games," melding found-footage clips with sexually suggestive shots of Del Rey, some digitally manipulated to have that vintage, early-1960s appeal. Among the images in the video are blooming roses, athletically gifted pole dancers, as well as clips from a scientific video that explores the chemical effects of crystal methamphetamine.

Del Rey designates the video as a "BIO PIC" in the video's YouTube description, but it's up to the viewer to decide how much or how little is an authentic glimpse into the life of the singer, who has been widely criticized for relying too heavily on artifice.